TRUTH BE TOLD

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

If Anonymous has definitive proof that Rove tried to hack the vote, present it.

If Anonymous has definitive proof that Rove tried to hack the vote, present it.

This isn't a movie. Rove isn't Lex Luthor. This is real life, and
Rove needs to be investigated if he tried to tamper with the 2012
election.

Anonymous needs to provide the evidence so that a real life investigation can be launched.

The jumping for joy and elation about what at present can be dimissed as a conspiracy theory is elevating Rove to untouchable.

It needs to end.

One of the problems with the 2004 election theft was trying to
convince people that Republicans were as despicable as we now know they
are. With the media complicit in aiding the Swift Liars, it was too easy
to write off the massive election tampering as whining. The 2000 Court
selection was easier to understand, but 2004 was an all-out assault on
the entire process of democracy.

Across the country there ws vote switching, tampering, long lines,
intimidation at the polls, closings, blackouts, confusion reporting the
results. A lot of people likely still don't know about these incidents,
but the outrage and the commissions that looked into the vote were very
real. There really isn't going to be anything like it again, and there
has already been a relatively incident-free election (2008) since then.

Here is an excerpt from the 2004 commission.

The first presidential election after HAVA
became law — on November 2, 2004 — brought to light as many problems as
in 2000, if not more. HAVA, which will take years to be fully
implemented, was not responsible for most of the complaints. Instead,
voters were discouraged or prevented from voting by the failure of
election offices to process voter registration applications or to mail
absentee ballots in time, and by the poor service and long lines at
polling stations in a number of states. There were also reports of
improper requests for voter ID and of voter intimidation and suppression
tactics. Concerns were raised about partisan purges of voter
registration lists and about deliberate failures to deliver voter
registration applications to election authorities. Moreover, computer
malfunctions impugned election results for at least one race, and
different procedures for counting provisional ballots within and between
states led to legal challenges and political protests. Had the margin
of victory for the presidential contest been narrower, the lengthy
dispute that followed the 2000 election could have been repeated.